Before the algorithm, we watched ‘surprise TV’, and it can still offer unexpected delights Emma Wilkins

7 months in The guardian

Our family’s holiday tradition? We throw caution to the wind and surrender to the novelty of free-to-air televisionI can see why kids who find themselves at a holiday shack where the only screen-based entertainment is an old TV would be perplexed. By the time you explain all the things the remote “control” doesn’t do, all you’re left with is a limited number of viewing options at any given time, and no control over when each starts or stops.In the age of smartphones and streaming, you could call it “dumb TV”. Or you could sell it as unique, novel, a game: “surprise TV”. Continue reading...

Mentioned in this news
Share it on